Monday, August 31, 2015

It’s been a while since last time, but we’ve got plenty of whale.to-level
conspiracy theorists in store. Donna and David Carrico run the website
ritualabusefree, and David Carrico is an annual speaker at something called the
Ministry to Masons Conferences (read that again). They are also affiliated with
EX-MASONS FOR JESUS and other counter-cult ministries (oh, the irony), and are proud to
have been guests on the 700 Club doing
a 3-day program called “The New World Order and Secret Societies.” They even appear to run an online Bible school. According
to themselves, their “counter-cult ministry is dedicated to exposing deeds of
darkness and educating anyone interested about Bible Doctrines, Apologetics,
Topical Bible Studies, Cults, Ritual Abuse,
The Occult, False Religions, and Secret Societies such as Freemasonry,” and you
can buy a variety of merchandise (including “VCR and cassette tapes”) from
their website, the most popular of which seems to be David’s book The Egyptian-Masonic-Satanic Connection,
which is frequently cited by people like Ron Patton over at Whale.to.
They also contributed a chapter to The Dark
Side of Freemasonry (ed. Ed Decker, whom we have encountered before),
and their videos have enticing titles like Satanic
Ritual Abuse and Secret Societies, The
Masonic Concept of God and Freemasonry
– Satan’s Wellspring of Satanism. Here are some of Donna’s visions and prophecies (yes, you’re looking at an important
part of the data on which they build their claims).

As the “VCR and cassette tape” thing suggests, the Carricos
are totally out of the loop. They are still pushing the Satanic Ritual Abuse myth so popular in the 1980s, and relying on the same discredited anecdotes
(but then, doesn’t the fact that there is evidence that these stories are false
just show that someone among the Powers That Be and Those Who Knows What They Don’t Want You to Know cares enough to try to
cover things up?) You can also get information about The Truth of the Da Vinci Code,
the heresy of Catholicism and Calvinism, various end-time rubbish, UFOs and
fallen angels, survivalism and the structure of Satan’s Kingdom from the Carricos. Mostly, though, their
rants seem to be concerned with freemasons (which is apparently at the core of
all the other topics).

And as there always is when you descend into the epistemic
hell that is secret-government conspiracy theories, there will be others there
who think you are a double agent and
part of the conspiracy. Craig Portwood of The Christian Underground, for
instance, has argued that the Carricos are false prophets and probably part on the conspiracies themselves.

Diagnosis: Off to la-la land, and their particular brand
seems to have gotten stuck in the 1980s, and freemasons are Satanists and
communists and perhaps really cenobites in disguise. Probably harmless.

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Holly Carmichael may be worth a mention for this,
but hardly a separate entry. It is hard to question the significance and
perniciousness of Ted Carrick, however.

Frederick
“Ted” Carrick is
a Canadian-American “Chiropractic Neurologist” and usually considered the father of modern chiropractic neurology.
Chiropractic neurology is, of course, utter bullshit, but that hasn’t prevented
the idea from gaining some currency among the reality-challenged segments of
the population, and Carrick currently runs the Carrick Brain Centers, places to avoid like
the plague if you suffer from any serious condition.

His
wikipedia page might even give some people the impression of a distinguished
career. In the 1980s, for instance, Carrick was asked to establish the
chiropractic neurology diplomat certification program by the American
Chiropractic Association, which is an organization to be wary of (partially, of
course, precisely because they asked someone like Carrick to establish a
diplomat certification program for them). He has also been a member of the clinical faculty
of Life University’s LIFE Functional Neurology Center, Professor Emeritus of Neurology at Parker College,Distinguished
Post Graduate Professor of Clinical Neurology at Logan College and Professor of Clinical
Neurology at Carrick Institute, all organizations you’d be well advised to
avoid. We are talking some serious pseudoscience here.

Among
Carrick’s dubious contributions to pseudoscience are his “studies” on “blind spot mapping”. The mapping,
which achieved frightening popularity in its time, is a simple paper-and-pencil
test that the practitioners say can tell how your brain is functioning (other
names include “brain
function testing”, “brain
mapping” or “cortical
mapping”) by detecting an enlarged blind spot in one eye, which is supposed to
reflect a malfunction in the brain that can be treated by manipulating the neck
on the same side. It is utter, complete nonsense,
but the practice is often defended by Carrick’s “study”, which is methodologically so bankrupt that he could just as well just have made it all up. Indeed, it is so bad that
the James Randi Educational Foundation contacted Carrick and offered him the famous $1,000,000 prize (awarded to anyone who can demonstrate the existence of the paranormal under
controlled conditions to eliminate the possibility of deliberate trickery or
self-delusion) if he could demonstrate that his blind spot test worked. Carrick
refused.

There is
a report on one of his presentations here.
The presentation was apparently … light on facts and science, but heavy on
anecdotes.

Glenn
Beck is apparently a fan of Carrick’s (after Carrick diagnosed him with a condition he almost certainly
did not have and offered him a treatment that almost certainly does not work),
which is, needless to say, not something to be proud of.

Diagnosis:
A fine specimen of the cargo cult scientist, Carrick apparently enjoys a rather
substantial fan base. Dangerous, in other words.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

According to antivaxxers,
vaccines cause autism. But some of them have expanded their search for causes
of autism to other, equally silly targets as well, in particular wireless
technology. Yes, the idea is that electromagnetic fields (EMFs) and wifi cause autism.
And among the proponents of this link there is at least one epidemiologist gone
rough to become a “brave maverick doctor” named George Louis Carlo, whose work has been picked up by familiar antivaxxers
such as homeopathHeidi Stevenson.
To be sure, there’s no biologically plausible mechanism behind the hypothesis,
and there’s no evidence of a link, but that has never stopped a good
pseudoscientist.

Carlo thinks that cell phone and
wireless signals can somehow affect children’s brains so the neurons can’t get
rid of toxic heavy metals, including mercury (how did the mercury get there? The obvious target is of course vaccines that never contained mercury in the first place).
Of course, the hypothesis that autism is caused by mercury poisoning is a completely dead hypothesis, but never mind – according to Carlo, the
important thing is that the alleged effects of EMFs explain why chelation therapy (a popular, useless and horrific thing to expose children to) “doesn’t work”
for some children. Now, once again, chelation doesn’t work because autism isn’t
mercury poisoning, but the heavy-metal connection is religious creed among
antivaxxers, and Carlo gives them the means to explain why their favored
treatments don’t work.

Carlo’s evidence for his bullshit
consists primarily of fallacious appeal to nature:
Radio waves that carry information do not occur naturally; therefore they are
toxic (in any dose).
He has actually done some “studies” as well (with one Tamara Mariea) –
non-blinded, non-randomized observations of children in (relatively) EMF-free
environments; needless to say, they’re crap and accordingly not published in
even minimally reputable venues.

He has apparently written a book
about it (with one Martin Schram) as well, Cell
Phones: Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age: An Insider’s Alarming
Discoveries about Cancer (Carlo once worked for the industry), which seems to be treated with caution even by committed EMF cranks (but they still refer to it since, you know, they favor the conclusions). Carlo
is currently fighting for the electrosensitivity lobby through an organization called the Safe Wireless Initiative project. They
have done studies (e.g. “a number of scientific papers in various stages of the
peer-review process expected to be published by year’s end [2007] addressing
this emerging medical problem”) and are very keen on sharing the results (but
talk little about the, you know, methods by which they obtained the results,
which is kind of important). Here is Carlo criticizing Ben Goldacre for being mean-spirited (he doesn’t just
accept their conclusions without evidence) and committing factual
errors while neglecting to actually
mention any.

Diagnosis: Pseudoscience through
and through, but the conclusions – for which there is no evidence – have become
sufficiently popular among certain kinds of people for his work to potentially
have some influence.

Friday, August 28, 2015

We have a hard time deciding what counts as the most
disgusting job description there is, but “celebrity medium” is certainly in the
running. Theresa Caputo, the Long Island Medium,
is precisely that, and portrays herself as a medium on the television show Long Island Medium, featured on the Orwellianly named
The Learning Channel.
Caputo claims to have seen spirits since she was four and claims that in her
family this is a normal thing. If correct, "hereditary ability to see spirits" would probably not quite be the right medical term for it.

Her sessions are glittering examples of cold reading and the Forer effect at work and, needless to say, no evidence of special abilities beyond those she share with any charismatic pyramid scheme pusher. Caputo’s
chats with those who have passed away and are on “the other side” are usually
wrapped in loving and moving messages that say precisely what her victims want
them to say (as all mediums and predators in the wild Caputo preys on and
targets people in difficult situations – and the sheer evil of it should break your heart; and no, it’s not harmless).
Indeed, in 2014 Ron Tebo publicly accused Caputo of going far beyond mere cold reading; she also sends staff members to
interview audience members in advance in order to be able to pretend that she
acquires knowledge from communicating with the deceased.

Dr. Oz is apparently a fan. At least Oz brought Caputo on his show to use a brain scan to “prove” that her “psychic” powers are real and true
while she performs bad cold readings (no, really – he did).
The scan was performed by Daniel Amen.
Amen admitted that there could be multiple explanations for the results, so he
concluded that Caputo likely has psychic abilities (yeah, that’s how it works).
The test, accordingly, tells you nothing about Caputo, but quite a bit about
the quality of Dr. Oz’s critical thinking skills (or honesty) and thus about the trustworthiness of his medical advice in
general.

Diagnosis: Another “unsinkable rubber duck,” as those who
understand how psychic scams work call them. It doesn’t matter that these
mediums are wrong, and caught in the act; they tell the audience – who has no
clue how subjective validation works – what they want to hear, and any criticism is accordingly interpreted as
persecution.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Sometimes bigots make inane arguments against gay marriage,
and Paul Caprio – leader of the Coalition to Protect Children and Marriage
(currently FamilyPAC) a “family values” coalition in Illinois – is no exception.
In essence, Caprio’s argument is that there are very high murder rates in
Chicago, and we should therefore (yes, the connection is … nebulous) ensure
that kids are raised by married couples. The obvious conclusion to draw from that
is of course that gays should be allowed to marry, but Caprio has some trouble recognizing entailments and logical structures and arrives at the opposite
proposition. Here is another one of his campaigns.

He is also the signatory to letters to the president (then
Bush jr.) opposing any restrictions on CO2 emissions or measures to
prevent global warming, just to make sure that no reasonable person ever takes him
seriously.

Diagnosis: Apparently
he has a certain amount of influence in wingnut circles, which doesn’t reflect
well on those circles. There’s otherwise nothing novel about Caprio; he’s quite
simply your typical, predictable, bigoted loon.